Find Her
by Lisa Gardner is both bizarre and brilliant. Readers of Ms. Gardner’s D.D. Warren series already know what a fine writer she is. Detective D.D. Warren – that’s D for Determined and D for Driven – is supposed to be on desk duty due to injuries sustained while on a previous investigation, but try as they might, they can’t keep D.D. down. As her fellow officers remind her, she is allowed to delegate responsibilities, and she does try, but she just can’t help herself. D.D. is still trying to be in the thick of things, but she starts to realize that she mustn’t, and can’t do it all. So she does do some delegating. I wish some of her team members were developed more, as I feel I hardly know them except perhaps for the pathologist. However, I did like Samuel, the FBI advocate. I liked Flora’s mother, too. What a strong woman! I must also mention D.D.’s husband Alex and her four-year-old son Jack. I enjoy seeing this side of our dedicated, devoted detective. Unwinding, being a wife and mom.
Find Her features a woman named Flora Dane, who five years earlier was kidnapped while on a beach during spring break. She was confined to a pine box during much of her 472-day captivity. Over the course of the narrative, we hear Flora’s account of the events that took place during those days and months that she spent with her captor. We hear how she became dependent upon him, how she hated him, “loved” him, and felt like she lost herself.
Five years later, she is free. But is she really? She told her story to FBI victim advocate Samuel Keynes and has told no one else since. Now there is another young woman missing, and somehow Flora seems to be involved in her case. Is she treading where she should not go? Is she a vigilante? An advocate? Or a victim? Perhaps all three?
Chapter by chapter, sentence by sentence, word by word, Flora’s story unfolds. Her past is revealed, alternating with her present. Is it “deja vu all over again”? There are truly some bizarre twists early on that shocked me. As I continued to read, I realized that they are clues, brilliantly laid out. In doing so, Gardner portrays evil personified in ways that make us realize how devastating these abductions are to a victim’s body and psyche.
I also appreciate what must have been extensive research into kidnapping and abuse and the after-effects on victims and their families. How do they move on from being victims to survivors to persons living life again? Lisa Gardner portrays this effort in an impactful way. I love this series, and I loved this book!
5 stars